Washington D.C.-  Tuesday morning a surprise attack left the west side of the Pentagon in an inferno, destroying offices and important defense information in the process.  In these offices were the records of what the US was to do in the face of a domestic attack, and how the country was to react to the international political climates that are now changing.

"We are going to have to make it all up from square one," an official close to the White House claimed.  "I can't release any information on the new plan's contents [that is being written now in National Security Council meetings] but I'm pretty sure it's going to include something about squishing countries that harbor terrorists."

Currently there has been no official report of what the President intends to with the armed forces in response to the attacks on the east coast.

An informant who was an eyewitness claims to have seen office people and uniformed officers carrying large piles of paper and actually throwing them into the blaze.  It appeared to the informant that they were coming up from a basement, conceivably from where copies of important papers are kept.  The informant went on to assert that these were probably copies of the foreign policy guidelines, tossed into the fire to give the President more latitude in dealing with the situation.  When asked whether he believed that these papers fed the raging fire, witnesses claimed that it was already out of control, and that nothing could be done anyway.

The White House has not yet commented on this issue.

JF